Aquatic Ecosystem Health - Macroinvertebrate Monitoring
   
 
   
 

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General

The Australia-wide Assessment of River Health utilises a rapid, standardised method for assessing the ecological health of rivers, based on biological monitoring and habitat assessment, known as AusRivAS. Sites have been selected with advice from state agencies, local governments, industry, catchment organisations and communities, having regard to key river and catchment management issues.

AusRivAS consists of a series of state-specific mathematical models which use field data to predict the aquatic macroinvertebrate families that would be expected to be present in surveyed river sites in a "reference" (that is, pristine or near pristine) condition. These models have been developed using habitat information and macroinvertebrate surveys at approximately 1500 carefully selected reference sites that are in relatively pristine or the best possible condition.

River health assessment is based on the differences between what is found at test sites and what was predicted to have occurred there from a set of reference sites with similar geographic, physical, and chemical features.

Previous research has shown that various impacts, such as water quality changes, cause the loss of sensitive fauna. A ratio of the observed number of macroinvertebrate families to the expected number of families (the O:E score) can be calculated for each test site. The value of the O:E score can range from zero (indicating no families were found at the site) to slightly greater than one (indicating more than the expected number of families were found at the site).

The AusRivAS O:E score provides a reliable, integrated river health indicator that is responsive to a variety of impacts, including water quality, habitat condition, and changes in flow regime. The O:E scores are assigned to categories or bands that describe different levels of biological condition, ranging from 'richer than reference' condition (containing more families than expected) to 'impoverished' (containing very few of the expected families). These bands provide a 'biological health report' of the overall condition and severity of impact for various sites. This allows the general health of the river at the survey sites to be characterised.
While the AusRivAS scores do not provide a definitive indication of the cause of a disturbance, the scores enable the current condition of individual streams to be placed in a nation-wide context. Thus "stressed" or priority rivers can be identified for further investigation and management action.

Aquatic macroinvertebrates are very useful indicators in biological monitoring. They are generally visible to the naked eye and are commonly found in streams. They are an important source of food for fish, and many are well known to anglers - such as yabbies, dragonflies, mudeyes, stoneflies, and mayflies. They are widespread, easy to collect, relatively immobile, and most importantly, they reflect the aggregate of impacts of environmental change on the stream ecosystem.

Monitoring sites should be selected to include a variety of sites, representative of the types of waterways, land and water uses, and impacts in each river basin.

(Source: http://www.deh.gov.au/water/rivers/nrhp/monitoring.html)

Protocols

Setting water quality targets
http://www.deh.gov.au/water/quality/targets/handbook/pubs/handbook.pdf

Monitoring toolbox
http://www.deh.gov.au/water/rivers/nrhp/monitoring.html

Indicators
http://www.deh.gov.au/nrm/monitoring/indicators/river/index.html

Macroinvertebrates
http://www.deh.gov.au/water/rivers/nrhp/manual-nsw/index.html

National Water Quality Strategy (monitoring and reporting protocols)
http://www.deh.gov.au/water/quality/nwqms/

AusRivAS Macroinvertebrate Bioassessment and SIGNAL II
http://ausrivas.canberra.edu.au;
http://www.ea.gov.au/water/rivers/nrhp/monitoring.html

Costs

Macroinvertebrate per site.

  • Collection materials - $50
  • Taxonomic identification (family) - $100
  • Taxonomic identification (Species) - $200
Quality Assurance and Control - $50 (every 4 months)

Case Studies

Streamwatch
http://www.streamwatch.org.au/main.jsp?qref=21

Hornsby Shire Council
http://www.hornsby.nsw.gov.au/environment/index.cfm?NavigationID=1040

Morten Bay Waterways and Catchment Partnership (South East Queensland)
http://www.healthywaterways.org/filelibrary/FILE20039293127.pdf

South Coast Water Quality Monitoring program
http://www.esc.nsw.gov.au/Wq/index.htm

Waterwatch
http://www.waterwatch.org.au/library/action.html

Education
http://www.watercare.net/wll_cc/cw_inland_water_copy1.htm

People Contacts

http://www.asl.org.au/asl_volunteers.htm

Organisation Contacts

Department of the Environment and Heritage
John Gorton Building
King Edward Terrace
Parkes ACT 2600
GPO Box 787
Canberra ACT 2601
Phone: +61 2 6274 1111
Fax: +61 2 6274 1666
Email: Comments, Queries and Suggestions
URL: http://www.deh.gov.au

NSW Department of Environment and Conservation
59-61 Goulburn Street, Sydney
PO Box A290, Sydney South 1232
Phone: (02) 9995 5000 (switch)
Fax: (02) 9995 5999

 

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